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Showing 1-20 of 2,217 trials
NCT07583290
This is a multicenter, retrospective, real-world observational study aimed at developing and validating an artificial intelligence-based tool for identifying ulinastatin treatment responders and risk stratification in cardiac surgery patients undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Ulinastatin, a glycoprotein extracted from human urine, has shown potential benefits in reducing postoperative complications and inflammatory responses in cardiac surgery. However, evidence supporting its efficacy and optimal application in specific patient populations remains insufficient. This study will collect clinical data from approximately 4 tertiary cardiac centers in China, including patients who underwent cardiac surgery with CPB. Using machine learning algorithms (such as weighted K-modes clustering and XGBoost), the study aims to: (1) construct a multicenter real-world database for cardiac surgery; (2) identify clinical characteristics associated with ulinastatin treatment response; (3) develop and validate an AI-based risk stratification tool to assist clinical decision-making. This study may provide evidence-based guidance for personalized perioperative anti-inflammatory treatment in cardiac surgery.
NCT07487974
This study is to assess the impact of sanitary pads infused with active oxygen and negative ions on episiotomy pain, wound healing, and postpartum physical symptoms in primiparous women. Participants will be randomly allocated to either the intervention group, utilizing active oxygen and negative ion pads, or the control group, employing normal postpartum pads. The research will assess pain intensity, recovery advancement, and physical manifestations during the initial postpartum phase. The objective is to ascertain if the intervention offers supplementary advantages relative to usual care.
NCT07573033
This randomized controlled trial evaluates the effectiveness of postoperative topical antibiotics compared with oral antibiotics in patients undergoing surgical extraction of impacted mandibular third molars. The study aims to compare postoperative outcomes including infection, dry socket, pain, swelling, recovery time, patient satisfaction, and adverse effects associated with antibiotic use. A total of 90 participants undergoing mandibular third molar surgery will be randomly assigned to receive either topical antibiotic application at the surgical site or a standard postoperative course of oral antibiotics. Participants will be followed for 14 days after surgery with clinical assessments conducted at scheduled follow-up visits. Detailed Description: Impacted mandibular third molar extraction is one of the most commonly performed oral surgical procedures and is frequently associated with postoperative complications such as pain, swelling, infection, and alveolar osteitis (dry socket). Antibiotics are commonly prescribed after third molar surgery to reduce the risk of postoperative infections; however, routine systemic antibiotic use may contribute to adverse drug reactions and antibiotic resistance. Topical antibiotic application at the surgical site may offer localized antimicrobial effects while reducing systemic exposure and related complications. This study is a two-arm, parallel-group randomized controlled trial conducted at the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Liaquat College of Medicine and Dentistry, Karachi, Pakistan. The study duration is six months from February 2024 to July 2024. Ethical approval was obtained from the Institutional Review Board of Liaquat College of Medicine and Dentistry (REF.No.IRB/D-000090/24), and written informed consent is obtained from all participants before enrollment. A total of 90 participants aged 18 to 40 years undergoing surgical extraction of impacted mandibular third molars are enrolled and randomly allocated in a 1:1 ratio into two treatment groups using computerized block randomization with allocation concealment through sequentially numbered opaque sealed envelopes. Participants in the experimental group receive topical antibiotic application directly at the extraction site immediately after surgery, while participants in the comparator group receive a standard 5-day postoperative oral antibiotic regimen according to institutional protocol. All surgical procedures are performed under local anesthesia using standardized surgical techniques by qualified oral surgeons. Follow-up evaluations are conducted on postoperative days 1, 3, 7, and 14 to assess postoperative outcomes. The primary outcomes include postoperative infection and dry socket incidence. Secondary outcomes include postoperative pain measured using a Visual Analog Scale (VAS), facial swelling, patient satisfaction, recovery time, and adverse effects related to antibiotic therapy. Data are analyzed using Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) version 25. Descriptive statistics are used to summarize demographic and clinical variables. Comparative analyses between groups are performed using appropriate statistical tests, including chi-square tests for categorical variables, with a p-value of less than 0.05 considered statistically significant.
NCT03974828
The ODIN-Report study will be a randomized controlled trial of the effect of providing machine learning risk forecasts to providers caring for patients immediately after surgery on serious complications. The complications studied will be ICU admission or death on wards, acute kidney injury, and hospital length of stay.
NCT06729827
Single shot spinal anesthesia (SA) is the most commonly used technique for Caesarean section (CS) . SA is associated with maternal hypotension (Post Spinal Hypotension - PSH) often accompanied by nausea, vomiting, bradycardia and fetal acidosis. Preventive administration of vasopressors is widely used to counterbalance hypotension. Routine prophylactic infusion of phenylephrine and norepinephrine raises concerns for unnecessary treatment, reactive hypertension, baroreceptor-mediated bradycardia, and effects on fetal acidosis. Non-invasive continuous measurement of arterial pressure using a finger cuff is well established. Hypotension Prediction Index - HPI is an algorithm that could predict the onset of hypotension in working on invasive and non-invasive arterial waveform signal. The aim of this prospective randomized study is to compare the amount of PSH during elective caesarean section among two groups of patients receiving standard intermittent hemodynamic monitoring versus continuous ClearSight-HPI monitoring. The primary hypothesis is that hemodynamic management HPI-guided reduces the incidence, entity and duration of post-spinal hypotension, defined as mean arterial pressure (MAP) lower than 65 mmHg lasting more than one minute. The secondary aim was to study the impact of maternal PSH during CS on foetal outcome evaluated by comparing neonatal Apgar scores at 1 and 5 minutes after birth, and umbilical cord arterial and venous pH in the two groups.
NCT05190978
Surgical mesh products, particularly acellular dermal matrices (ADM), are now used by the majority of plastic surgeons to assist with the nearly 100,000 prosthetic breast reconstruction procedures in the United States, despite never being approved by Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for this indication. As surgeons transition to placing breast implants above the chest muscle (pre-pectoral), there has been an increasing reliance on these often expensive mesh products without robust evidence to understand their risks and benefits. Our pilot study is a randomized multi-center trial to evaluate surgical mesh assistance in pre-pectoral tissue expander to breast implant reconstruction to address vital questions for women's public health.
NCT07563569
compare the impact of type of anesthesia on ERCP including technical success, rate of complications, peri procedural safety, patient and endoscopist satisfaction in adult patients with obstructive jaundice
NCT05308732
This study aims to propose an alternative and auxiliary methodology for the prevention and treatment of Oral Mucositis (OM) in patients undergoing radiotherapy or radio and chemotherapy for head and neck neoplasms through the use of copaiba-based mouthwash, since the treatment that currently has proven efficacy for the prevention of OM(Low Power Laser Therapy) cannot be applied in tumor regions due to the risk of stimulating the tissue proliferation of malignant cells.
NCT06511258
The STRIVE Before Surgery Trial evaluates patient-reported disability at 90 days after surgery following participating in a home-based multimodal prehabilitation program supported through an online platform. Half of the participants will be randomized into the prehabilitation group, while the other half will be randomized into the control group.
NCT04663958
The term postoperative pulmonary complication is the development of any complications affecting the respiratory system after anesthetic and surgery procedures. The ARISCAT risk assessment score is a seven-variable regression model that divides patients into low, moderate, and high-risk groups. In this study, the investigators aimed to investigate the effectiveness of the ARISCAT risk scoring index in predicting postoperative pulmonary complication development in patients scheduled for major abdominal cancer surgery.
NCT05931887
To assess the ability of the Silq ClearTract™ 100% Silicone 2-Way Foley Catheter to reduce catheter associated complications in subjects that require a long-term indwelling Foley catheter when compared to other commercially available Foley catheters.
NCT07360691
This prospective, single-arm clinical study evaluates the safety, feasibility, and early clinical outcomes of High-Purity Type I Collagen (HPTC; Surgicoll-Mesh®) when used as a biologic reinforcement in selected hernia repair scenarios where permanent synthetic mesh placement is undesirable. Outcomes focus on early postoperative safety, wound healing, and complication profiles over an 8-week follow-up period.
NCT05005117
This is a randomized, controlled, parallel, multicenter trial to compare post-operative complications and long-term results between open and laparoscopic technique in emergency colorectal surgery.
NCT06703814
The investigators want to investigate in patients undergoing robot-assisted laparoscopic surgery (a minimally invasive procedure) how applicable flow-controlled ventilation is, and whether it might also be safer than the current ventilation techniques, as well as its impact on potentially reducing the risk of lung-specific complications. Flow-controlled ventilation has already been tested in several studies on animals and humans and has proven to be a safe form of ventilation for patients undergoing surgery under general anesthesia. When patients undergo major surgery, general anesthesia is required and, as a result, mechanical ventilation of the lungs. Especially in long and complex surgeries, ventilation can become more difficult or lead to complications postoperatively. These patients may then experience shortness of breath, coughing, or require medication to improve lung function. In some cases, reintubation or additional mechanical ventilation may be necessary for support. Previous human studies have shown that flow-controlled ventilation is less stressful and, therefore, potentially safer for the lungs compared to traditional ventilation techniques, and that less supplemental oxygen is required. This effect and the safety of flow-controlled ventilation have been demonstrated in several studies. Therefore, in this study, the investigators aim to explore whether flow-controlled ventilation is potentially safer and easier to apply than traditional ventilation techniques and whether it can reduce the risk of lung-specific complications following robot-assisted surgeries, thereby improving the recovery process postoperatively.
NCT06446739
An estimated 10-15% of critically ill patients with acute kidney failure in the intensive care unit receive acute dialysis therapy. The majority of these patients initially receive a continuous form of dialysis therapy call continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT). Prior studies have suggested that higher CRRT dose-intensity improved health outcomes for these patients; however, this was not found in high-quality clinical trials. These more recent trials suggested a lower range of dose-intensity compared with the higher range as the new standard of care. This was incorporated into guidelines. To date, no clinical trials have evaluated this lower range and specifically, it is plausible that an even lower dose-intensity of CRRT may be well tolerated, safe, associated with similar outcomes and be more cost-effective. This is the objective of the WISDOM trial, to compare the guideline standard with lower dose-intensity among patients who are started on CRRT in the intensive care unit.
NCT07537491
Perioperative complications following surgery for colorectal cancer (CRC) represent a major cause of postoperative morbidity and mortality. Existing risk stratification tools lack the precision to capture the complex biological and morphological factors that determine individual patient vulnerability. Artificial intelligence (AI)-based analysis of medical imaging data offers a promising approach to improve preoperative risk prediction. The KIA-Korekt study investigates whether perioperative complications in CRC patients can be predicted using multimodal AI-based image analysis. Three complementary imaging modalities are integrated: digital histopathology (haematoxylin-eosin whole-slide images, H\&E-WSIs), preoperative CT and MRI radiomics, and multiplex tissue imaging (mTI) including multiplex immunohistochemistry (mIHC) and imaging mass cytometry (IMC). The study includes a retrospective cohort of approximately 750 CRC patients treated between 2011 and 2021, and a prospective validation cohort of approximately 210 patients recruited from 2026 to 2028. Deep learning and radiomic feature extraction pipelines are applied to all modalities individually and in multimodal combination. Predicted outcomes include anastomotic leakage, wound infection, sepsis, ICU admission, and in-hospital mortality within 30 days of surgery. The study is conducted at the University Hospital Brandenburg, Brandenburg Medical School Theodor Fontane, in collaboration with the Department of Computational Pathology, TU Dresden.
NCT07535944
The development of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) has revolutionized the management of many oncological diseases, and their use continues to increase. ICIs are monoclonal antibodies that target immune checkpoints such as PD-1 (programmed cell death protein 1, as seen in nivolumab, pembrolizumab, and cemiplimab), PD-L1 (programmed cell death protein 1 ligand, as seen in atezolizumab, avelumab, and durvalumab), CTLA-4 (cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4, as seen in ipilimumab and tremelimumab), or LAG-3 (lymphocyte-activating gene 3, as seen in relatlimab), which play a crucial role in immune tolerance to cancer cells. However, the surge in ICI prescriptions has been accompanied by the occurrence of numerous side effects, some of which are severe or even fatal. ICIs have a different toxicity spectrum than conventional chemotherapy, and most toxicities result from excessive immunity against different organs. This immune-mediated toxicity can affect various organ systems, including the heart and blood vessels. Pharmacovigilance data from clinical trials conducted by Bristol-Myers Squibb, which marketed ipilimumab (anti-CTLA-4) and nivolumab (anti-PD1), revealed 18 cases (0.09%) of myocarditis among 20,594 subjects. While cardiac complications induced by immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), particularly autoimmune myocarditis, are widely described, the impact of these treatments on the vascular system remains poorly understood. However, a variety of vascular complications have been reported, ranging from vasculitis of large, medium, and small vessels to a possible increase in arterial thrombotic events, ischemic strokes, and acute coronary syndromes. The incidence of vasculitis appears to be between 1% and 2% of patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). This is emerging as a significant signal in various pharmacovigilance studies, suggesting the involvement of immune checkpoint derepression in the pathophysiology of vasculitis. A translational study demonstrated the major role of CTLA-4 in the pathophysiology of giant cell arteritis (GCA), although the precise mechanisms involved remain to be determined. Therefore, a specific immune environment could promote the development of vasculitis, a phenomenon reproduced by ICI administration. The increase in arterial thrombotic vascular events was primarily observed in a matched cohort study, which showed a threefold increased risk of arterial thrombotic vascular events following the initiation of ICI therapy. These thrombotic events would coincide with the acceleration of atherosclerosis in patients treated with ICIs. This "accelerated" atherosclerosis could be linked to inflammatory changes within the plaques, causing plaque destabilization or rupture. It is also unreasonable to rule out the possibility that the accelerated atherosclerosis is related to the development of vasculitis in these patients.
NCT07071376
The standard dialysate temperature is usually set at 36.5°C in hemodialysis applications. Since this temperature is close to the patient's body temperature, it is ideal for preventing the patient from experiencing hypothermia while ensuring cardiovascular stability. In the literature, it is seen that changing the dialysate temperature, especially cold dialysis applications, is used in the management of nausea, the effect on vital signs, determining hemodialysis adequacy and common complications, and in the management of symptoms such as hypotension, cardiac stability, vascular stability, fatigue, and muscle cramps. However, no study has been found using cold dialysis in the management of fatigue that develops after dialysis.Therefore, the aim of this study is to examine the effect of cold dialysis application on post-dialysis fatigue in patients receiving hemodialysis treatment.
NCT04559334
In this research study we want to learn more about a study drug, tetrasodium sodium EDTA (Kitelock™) for maintaining the patency (blood flow) through a central venous catheter. Catheter occlusions such as blood clots have been shown to increase the risk of central line-associated bloodstream infection (CLABSI). This treatment consists of instilling a daily a dose of a solution , similar to heparin or saline lock flushes, into the catheter when it is not in use. The aim is to prevent CLABSI without increasing complications such as catheter breakage.
NCT07531966
* To determine the incidence of arterial inflow problems and venous outflow problems as causes of impaired renal function and/or treatment-resistant hypertension after kidney transplantation, when all kidney-transplant recipients in Denmark are evaluated according to uniform, well-defined clinical criteria. * To investigate the efficacy and safety of catheter-based balloon treatment (percutaneous transluminal angioplasty, PTA) for these vascular complications, of which transplant renal artery stenosis is by far the most common. * To assess whether novel imaging and functional diagnostic methods can predict treatment response.